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After an enjoyable outing with the boys on Wednesday fishing to Maple Leaf Bar I was itching to get back into that lawn chair for some more relaxation and away from this computer and the gravel file.
I got organized early, remembering the dew worms I had picked the night before as I was going to try for some cutthroat before hitting the bar.
I decide to search for some golf balls as my Hole In One brand have been flying off the shelf even after increasing the price from $20 to $30 for a hundred, a few days ago.
Before you rush to the phone to order some they are mostly grade “C” balls.
It is amazing how many balls the golf hackers lose, if we lost that many fish I guess we would be a temperamental as these guys that try to hit that little white thing in that little hole in the grass.
Anyway in about 30 minutes I had around 75 from the now dry ditch along the course ready to pop into the old washing machine to give them another life but I am sure they will soon once find a lonesome home once again. They will be driven into some tall grass, a clump of blackberries safe even from the most intense golf ball shagger, a smelly ditch or some pond on the course. Of course their loss my gain.
I then head towards the river but first to get some boat gas that now costs about $6 a gallon, how many golf balls will it take to cover that? 3 if some are Titlists Pro V 1’s.
I reach for my wallet to slip my card in the gas pump but could not find it, where is it, most have left it at home or fell out of the wallet. I use another card and top up the Leaf Craft’s gas tank and a couple of smaller ones. Always good to have a little extra as someone as forgetful as me could run the tank dry. Ever done that? Stranded on some body of water waving a distress flag.
I decide I better go home and try to find it, trip delayed again. I could not find it must of lost it so decide to cancel it just incase. I check with the company and it had not been used since my last purchase, relief.
Finally I am at the Island 22 launch it’s mostly empty of trailers and on my way down river to try to find an early run Fraser River cutt shark that is returning from the ocean getting ready to spawn in a few month.
Partway down the F/N are emptying there nets of sockeye they are doing well.
Then I remember I have left my camera and video camera in the Leaf Mobile so back I go. If I get a nice cut I sure will want to get a picture of these beautiful little fish.
With the cameras now in the boat I pick my way through some uncharted waters, a few people still towing but the majority are working the bar rods but most of the bars are bare. The guides seeking the mighty sturgeon in the depths on the Mighty Fraser are spread throughout the gravel reach.
I arrive at the spot and see The Master and Don also settled in, I anchor below them and rig. A fat juicy worm is attached and action is non stop for the 4 hours I try but my only success is 7 pike minnows, 2 chub and 4 sculpins. The water is smooth and only dimpled by a couple of thunderstorms that seem to breed and grow above Sumas Mountain with some pea sized hail in for good measure. Glad I brought the rain gear; I see The Master and Don huddled together under an umbrella.
Finally I decide to head back upstream thinking it really is a bit early for cutthroat. I find a vacant bar and make a fire to have some tube steaks.
I settle in around the fire and have a god shore supper, its around 6:30.
With my stomach now satisfied I cleanup the bar a bit including a discarded lawn chair, how careless some people are.
I restoke the fire and once again settle into the lawn chair and enjoy the fire’s warmth, the setting sun, the seals looking for supper too, a several F/N’s busy empting their nets before darkness closes in, they are doing well on the sox.
Suddenly the Fraser King bar’s bend is now dancing away, I try to eject from the chair but it bends, crumples and traps me in its clutches, was it the one Shane used the other day.
I finally gain my feet learching to the pole that is now straight up, the fish as come towards the shore, I reach, pull it from the rod holder in the Leaf Craft and set the hook, the battle is now on.
To prevent another battle, the domestic type I must break as I promised to take my wife to the show, back at 10 or so.